Known for his use of expressive and uninhibited color,
Arthur B. Carles explored modernist principles without
following a strict formula. He often arrived at artistic
innovations in advance of other painters of his day. Considered
a precursor of the Abstract Expressionists, he and his
work were respected and admired by major critics and fellow
artists including Hans Hofmann. He was recognized by Art
News as one of the most important art teachers in
America.
Born in Philadelphia on March 9, 1882, Arthur
Beecher Carles, Jr., may have received his first artistic
instruction from his father, who was a designer and amateur
artist. As a young man, Carles studied at the Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts between 1900 and 1907. His teachers—among
them Thomas Anshutz, Hugh Breckenridge, Henry McCarter,
Cecilia Beaux, and William Merritt Chase—were inspired
by modern French painting and all stressed color and design
to varying degrees. In 1903 Carles won the Henry P. Thouron
Prize for best student composition and participated in
the Philadelphia Watercolor Exhibition. Two years later,
Carles was awarded the William Emlen Cresson Traveling
Scholarship. Accompanied by artist friend George Oberteuffer,
he visited London, Paris, and possibly Chase’s class
in Madrid.
In 1907, Carles embarked on another extended stay in France
provided by the two-year Cresson scholarship. John Trask,
director of the Academy, took a special interest in Carles
and arranged for a commission from a Philadelphia church
for a copy of Raphael’s Transfiguration in
the Vatican. Trask was later instrumental in placing the
artist’s work in the Panama-Pacific Exposition of
1915, where Carles won a silver medal for White Nude
with Apple.
Carles stayed in Paris until 1910, immersing himself in
the newest trends in art. He visited Leo and Gertrude Stein’s
salon and associated with other American artists such as
John Marin and Edward Steichen. Carles was particularly
attracted to the work of Paul Cézanne and Henri
Matisse, and his canvases from this period reveal Matisse’s
influence. In March 1910, through Edward Steichen’s
intervention, Carles’s work was included in the “Younger
American Painters” show held at Alfred Stieglitz’s
New York gallery, 291. In its review of the show, the Philadelphia Inquirer remarked
of Carles, “he represents more ably and fully than
anyone else at present working in America the spirit of
the new or modern movement in art in France today.” Stieglitz
gave Carles his first one-man show at 291 in January 1912.
The following June, Carles returned to Voulangis, the village
outside of Paris where the Steichens lived.
Carles returned from France in December 1912 with several
landscapes, two of which he exhibited at the Armory Show
of 1913. He painted still lifes with Breckenridge in which
they used similar objects, and their compositions are almost
indiscernible in style. By this time, Carles was a confirmed
modernist and he became a fervent spokesman for modern
art in Philadelphia. During this period, Carles also painted
his only major allegorical piece, The Marseillaise (Philadelphia
Museum of Art), inspired by his love of France. When
exhibited at the Academy’s annual exhibition of 1919,
the painting took the Stotesbury Prize and the Fellowship
Prize, and it was hung in the Place of Honor.
Carles was instrumental in organizing three exhibitions
at the Pennsylvania Academy in Philadelphia with the help
of Stieglitz and others and the encouragement of his friend
Leopold Stokowski, the conductor of the Philadelphia Symphony
Orchestra. His efforts took place in the context
of the city’s cultural renaissance of the teens and
1920s. The 1923 exhibition of European modernist paintings
from the collection of Dr. Albert C. Barnes provoked particularly
strong reactions. Carles also played an influential role
as a teacher of younger artists. He taught the Saturday
morning Sketch Class at the Academy from 1917 to 1925 and
taught privately afterwards.
Carles lived in France for part of a year spanning 1921
and 1922 and for two years between 1929 and 1931. During
this decade, he began experimenting with breaking up forms
with cubist planes of color. After his return to the United
States, he renewed his friendship with Hans Hofmann, whom
he had met years before in Paris. He shared Hofmann’s
love for Fauvist color and interest in Cubist space. The
two artists, accompanied by Carles’s daughter Mercedes,
who was Hofmann’s pupil, lived together in Gloucester,
Massachusetts during the summer of 1934.
In the last phase of his career, Carles painted a number
of ambitious abstract compositions, despite repeated hospitalizations
for alcoholism. His life as an artist drew to an abrupt
close in December 1941 with a fall and stroke that left
him an invalid until his death in 1952.
Carles is represented in major public collections, including
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American
Art, and the Museum of Modern Art, all in New York; the Newark
Museum, New Jersey; the Baltimore Museum of Art; the Phillips
Collection, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, and
the Corcoran Gallery of Art, all in Washington, D.C.; the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Philadelphia
Museum of Art in Philadelphia; and the Art Institute of Chicago.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries